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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Shi-xu (Hangzhou Normal University, China) , Kwesi Kwaa Prah (University of the Western Cape, South Africa) , María Pardo (National Council of Scientific and Technical Research and University of Buenos Aires, Argentina)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.330kg ISBN: 9780367133849ISBN 10: 0367133849 Pages: 180 Publication Date: 27 September 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPrologue Part I: Asian Discourse Studies 1. Asian Discourse for Development 2. Contemporary Chinese Communication from a Cultural-Psychological Perspective 3. International City Branding as Intercultural Discourse: Workplace, development and globalization Part II: African Discourse Studies 4. A Discourse on the Usage of African Languages for Scientific and Technological Education and Development 5. The Role of Language and Literacy in the Acquisition of Knowledge: The African context 6. Language Policies and Power Dynamics in Africa: Problems linked to linguistic policies and power relations within countries as well as between countries Part III: Latin American Discourse Studies 7. Latin-American Cultural-Critical Studies 8. Culture and Political Challenges: Television narratives AOUT the 30th anniversary of the Malvinas/Falklands War 9. Modernity, Postmodernity, Culture and Representations of Work in the Discourse of the Argentine Extremely Poor EpilogueReviews'It encouarges cultural equality and diversity in the academic field as well as being a useful resource for those working in the fields of discourse studies, cultural studies and developing country studies in general.' - Nan Wu and Jingyuan Zhang, Discourse and Communication 'Several elements make the volume rather attractive, such as a collective authorship, native scholars with wide research experience in the relevant discourses, case studies on socially broad issues and unique cultural perspectives, and tools toward development communication studies. As a whole, it is a well-organized and somewhat an innovative book with a range of merits. First, it provides rich content and selects multifarious local discourses pertinent to development from the continents of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, respectively, which enables both diversity and usefulness. Second, different from most existing researches of development, it adopts multifaceted historical and cultural perspectives to demonstrate the changes of the developing world in many respects, including economy, politics, science, technology, and culture. Third, it is vitally important and significant, though it seems ambitious, that against the mainstream communication studies and critical discourse analysis, the authors strive to construct plural, creative, critical, and non-Western paradigms of discourse studies, such as the nascent paradigm of cultural discourse studies (CDS). [...] I would highly recommend this book to scholars and students who are interested in cultural discourse/communication studies and develop-ment studies.' - Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Volume 95, Issue 1 'It encouarges cultural equality and diversity in the academic field as well as being a useful resource for those working in the fields of discourse studies, cultural studies and developing country studies in general.' - Nan Wu and Jingyuan Zhang, Discourse and Communication 'Several elements make the volume rather attractive, such as a collective authorship, native scholars with wide research experience in the relevant discourses, case studies on socially broad issues and unique cultural perspectives, and tools toward development communication studies. As a whole, it is a well-organized and somewhat an innovative book with a range of merits. First, it provides rich content and selects multifarious local discourses pertinent to development from the continents of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, respectively, which enables both diversity and usefulness. Second, different from most existing researches of development, it adopts multifaceted historical and cultural perspectives to demonstrate the changes of the developing world in many respects, including economy, politics, science, technology, and culture. Third, it is vitally important and significant, though it seems ambitious, that against the mainstream communication studies and critical discourse analysis, the authors strive to construct plural, creative, critical, and non-Western paradigms of discourse studies, such as the nascent paradigm of cultural discourse studies (CDS). [...] I would highly recommend this book to scholars and students who are interested in cultural discourse/communication studies and develop-ment studies.' - Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Volume 95, Issue 1 Author InformationShi-xu is Changjiang Distinguished Professor, founding Director of the Centre for Discourse and Cultural Studies, Hangzhou Normal University, China. He is founding and former Director of the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Discourse Studies, Zhejiang University, China and has held teaching posts in the Netherlands, the UK and Singapore. Kwesi Kwaa Prah is Professor Emeritus in Sociology of the University of the Western Cape. He is founder and former Director of the Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS) based in Cape Town, South Africa. María Laura Pardo is Researcher at the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET), Director of the Department of Linguistics at the Philosophical and Cultural Anthropology Research Centre (CIAFIC-CONICET), Professor of Analysis of the Languages of the Mass Media at the Faculty of Arts, University of Buenos Aires. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |